Fundamental theorem of asset pricingThe fundamental theorems of asset pricing (also: of arbitrage, of finance), in both financial economics and mathematical finance, provide necessary and sufficient conditions for a market to be arbitrage-free, and for a market to be complete. An arbitrage opportunity is a way of making money with no initial investment without any possibility of loss.[1] Though arbitrage opportunities do exist briefly in real life, it has been said that any sensible market model must avoid this type of profit.[2]: 5 The first theorem is important in that it ensures a fundamental property of market models. Completeness is a common property of market models (for instance the Black–Scholes model). A complete market is one in which every contingent claim can be replicated. Though this property is common in models, it is not always considered desirable or realistic.[2]: 30 Discrete marketsIn a discrete (i.e. finite state) market, the following hold:[2]
In more general marketsWhen stock price returns follow a single Brownian motion, there is a unique risk neutral measure. When the stock price process is assumed to follow a more general sigma-martingale or semimartingale, then the concept of arbitrage is too narrow, and a stronger concept such as no free lunch with vanishing risk (NFLVR) must be used to describe these opportunities in an infinite dimensional setting.[3] In continuous time, a version of the fundamental theorems of asset pricing reads:[4] Let be a d-dimensional semimartingale market (a collection of stocks), the risk-free bond and the underlying probability space. Furthermore, we call a measure an equivalent local martingale measure if and if the processes are local martingales under the measure .
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